NDP pledges support for small Sask. businesses, Broten responds to platform costing question
NDP's platform line items all online, 'in black and white': Broten
As the provincial election campaign enters its final week before election day on April 4, NDP Leader Cam Broten made a stop in Moose Jaw to throw his party's support behind small businesses in the province.
That included new campaign promises for small businesses.
According to a NDP release, those promises include pledges to: overhaul government and Crown corporation procurement processes to give local businesses equal chances when bidding for contracts; initiating a buy-local campaign to promote local businesses; and support and expand entrepreneurial incubator and accelerator initiatives.
Broten also pledged to: support craft brewers and distillers and include growler stations and displays in SLGA liquor stores; and cut the two per cent small business tax for companies employing at least three people when the province's fiscal capacity allows.
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"Small businesses are the backbone of our economy, and we need to support these job creators," Broten said in the release. "I want to diversify our economy with more eggs in more baskets. We can take concrete steps to give small, local businesses the climate they need to grow and thrive."
Questions about platform costing
While at a campaign stop in Regina earlier in the day, a reporter asked Broten if there's any reason why he and his campaign team haven't detailed the specific costs of the party's platform at public forums and events.
"No. All the information is there [online], with every initiative we're rolling out and all of our infrastructure projects," Broten responded.
When asked what the platform will cost, Broten said, "All the entire costing for infrastructure projects, line items for programs, that is all included, as I said, hidden away on the Internet, with the full costing of what we'd be doing for full projects and other iniatives."
He also stated that a big focus of the platform is redirecting what his party sees as previously wasted dollars towards front line care workers.
Brad Wall campaigns in La Ronge
Saskatchewan Party Leader Brad Wall spent time on Monday in La Ronge in the northern constituency of Cumberland.
Wall travelled to the area to support candidate Thomas Sierzycki, and to thank people in the community for their efforts during last summer's unprecedented forest fires and evacuation of La Ronge and neighbouring communities.
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While Wall made no campaign announcements in the north, he said if re-elected, his government would provide an additional $500,000 annually to expand the remote presence technology pilot project underway in Pelican Narrows to additional northern communities.